+ s.summary ="If you are not in Rails but use RSpec, then Steak is just some aliases providing you with the language of acceptance testing (feature, scenario, background). If you are in Rails, you also have a couple of generators, a rake task and full Rails integration testing (meaning Webrat support, for instance)"

+ # If you want to depend on other gems, add them here, along with any

+ # relevant versions

+ # s.add_dependency("some_other_gem", "~> 0.1.0")

+

+ # If your tests use any gems, include them here

+ s.add_development_dependency("rspec")

+end

+

+# This task actually builds the gem. We also regenerate a static

+# .gemspec file, which is useful if something (i.e. GitHub) will

+# be automatically building a gem for this project. If you're not

+# using GitHub, edit as appropriate.

+#

+# To publish your gem online, install the 'gemcutter' gem; Read more

+# about that here: http://gemcutter.org/pages/gem_docs

+Rake::GemPackageTask.new(spec) do |pkg|

+ pkg.gem_spec = spec

end

-desc 'Generate documentation for the steak plugin.'

-Rake::RDocTask.new(:rdoc) do |rdoc|

- rdoc.rdoc_dir ='rdoc'

- rdoc.title ='Steak'

- rdoc.options <<'--line-numbers'<<'--inline-source'

- rdoc.options <<'--charset'<<'utf-8'

- rdoc.rdoc_files.include('README.rdoc')

- rdoc.rdoc_files.include('lib/**/*.rb')

+desc "Build the gemspec file #{spec.name}.gemspec"

+task :gemspecdo

+ file =File.dirname(__FILE__) +"/#{spec.name}.gemspec"

+ File.open(file, "w") {|f| f << spec.to_ruby }

+end

+

+task :package => :gemspec

+

+# Generate documentation

+Rake::RDocTask.newdo |rd|

+ rd.main ="README.rdoc"

+ rd.rdoc_files.include("README.rdoc", "lib/**/*.rb")

+ rd.rdoc_dir ="rdoc"

end

-begin

- require'jeweler'

- Jeweler::Tasks.newdo |gemspec|

- gemspec.name ="steak"

- gemspec.summary ="If you are not in Rails but use RSpec, then Steak is just some aliases providing you with the language of acceptance testing (feature, scenario, background). If you are in Rails, you also have a couple of generators, a rake task and full Rails integration testing (meaning Webrat support, for instance)"

- gemspec.description ="Minimalist acceptance testing on top of RSpec"

- s.summary =%q{If you are not in Rails but use RSpec, then Steak is just some aliases providing you with the language of acceptance testing (feature, scenario, background). If you are in Rails, you also have a couple of generators, a rake task and full Rails integration testing (meaning Webrat support, for instance)}